| Literature DB >> 32614736 |
Gretchen E Ely1, Braden K Linn2, Michele Staton3, Travis W Hales4, Kafuli Agbemenu5, Eugene Maguin6.
Abstract
This study describes a secondary data analysis of contraceptive use across the lifetime and within the six months prior to incarceration in a sample of 400 currently incarcerated women recruited from rural, Appalachian jails, who were using drugs prior to incarceration. Phase 1 (baseline) data from an NIH funded study were used to examine rates of contraceptive use, reasons for nonuse of condoms, and correlates of condom use. Results indicate that the majority (96.5%) of respondents reported lifetime use of contraceptives, and most (70.5%) had a history of using multiple methods, with male condoms, oral contraceptive pills, and contraceptive injections being the most commonly used methods. Almost 69% of respondents reported nonuse of contraceptives within the last six months, despite high rates of involvement in risky, intimate male partnerships prior to incarceration. Contraceptive use was found to be historically acceptable in this sample, in stark contrast to rates of use within the last six months prior to incarceration, suggesting that reproductive justice-informed, social work interventions to help improve current contraceptive use are warranted as a harm-reduction approach.Entities:
Keywords: Appalachia; Contraceptive use; condoms; drug-using; jails; rural; women
Year: 2020 PMID: 32614736 PMCID: PMC7337968 DOI: 10.1080/00981389.2020.1769249
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Soc Work Health Care ISSN: 0098-1389